The coin is a Morgan Dollar and value depends on condition and if it has any mintmarks, look on the back under the eagles tail for small letters, an O,S or CC if no mintmarks are seen the coin was struck in Philadelphia. The mintmarks are very important to value. Look at the coin again and post new question.
The minimum value as of 3-8-11 is about $25.00 just for the silver.
Please post a new question with the coin's denomination. Quarters, half dollars, and silver dollars from 1889 all fit your description.
About 5-10 dollars
In circulated condition they are worth on average $16 to $20. 1889 Morgan dollars struck at Philadelphia are not rare dates.
46 dollars
All of them are worth about $20.00 just for the silver, with out specific dates, mintmarks and a idea of the condition (grade) of the coins, it's the best I can do. Post new question with more info.
Any copy is only worth the value of the metal it's made of. Unless it says something like "999 silver" somewhere on the copy it's probably just plated base metal.See the Related Question for values of genuine 1889 dollars.
Your 1889 "e pluribus unum coin" is actually a 1889 Morgan dollar, this series of silver dollars were made from 1878 to 1904 & 1921 at 5 different Mints. The 1889 date is very common and assuming the coin is circulated and has no mintmark retail values are $17.00-$26.00
Silver dimes are worth about $2.50 in US dollars. This is about. 2.49 Canadian dollars. Silver quarters are worth about $5. This is about $4.98 Canadian dollars.
There were no silver dollars minted in 1952.
Well i looked on Wikipedia and its worth around $1 but in excellent condition i will guess maybe 4-5 dollars
need more info ... what kind of silver dollars?
100